Issue 10, 2014

Non-invasive mapping of interstitial fluid pressure in microscale tissues

Abstract

This study describes a non-invasive method for mapping interstitial fluid pressure within hydrogel-based microscale tissues. The method is based on embedding (or forming) a tissue within a silicone (PDMS) microfluidic device, and measuring the extremely slight displacement (<1 μm) of the PDMS optically when the device is pressurized under static and flow conditions. The displacement field under uniform pressure provides a map of the local device stiffness, which can then be used to obtain the non-uniform pressure field under flow conditions. We have validated this method numerically and applied it towards determining the hydraulic properties of tumor cell aggregates, blind-ended epithelial tubes, and perfused endothelial tubes that were all cultured within micropatterned collagen gels. The method provides an accessible tool for generating high-resolution maps of interstitial fluid pressure for studies in mechanobiology.

Graphical abstract: Non-invasive mapping of interstitial fluid pressure in microscale tissues

Article information

Article type
Technical Innovation
Submitted
15 Jul 2014
Accepted
27 Aug 2014
First published
28 Aug 2014

Integr. Biol., 2014,6, 979-987

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